At
the Warsaw Security Forum are (from left) Hodges, ex-Nato secretary-general
Anders Fogh Rasmussen and Deutsche Welle journalist Ali Aslan.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
OCT 25, 2018, 12:49 AM SGT
WARSAW (AFP) - The former commander
of US Army forces in Europe warned on Wednesday (Oct 24) of a "very strong
likelihood" of an armed conflict between his country and China in the
Pacific.
"I think in 15 years, it's not
inevitable, but it is a very strong likelihood that we will be at war with
China," recently retired US Lieutenant-General Ben Hodges told defence
experts meeting at the Warsaw Security Forum in the Polish capital.
Hodges served as US Army commander in
Europe until last year and is now a strategic studies expert at the
Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis (CEPA).
"The United States does not have
the capacity to do everything it has to do in Europe and in the Pacific to deal
with the Chinese threat," he said, also describing the US commitment to
Nato as "unshakeable".
NATO manoeuvres at the end of October
in Norway are intended as a show of force and unity in the face of an
increasingly assertive Russia.
Running from Oct 24-Nov 7, the
Trident Juncture 18 exercise will draw in 45,000-50,000 troops - the biggest
movement of NATO personnel and vehicles since the Cold War.
"It's in the American interest -
and the American leadership knows that - to have a very strong European pillar.
Even if not one European country is spending a euro on its own defence,
stability and security in Europe is in the interest of the United States,"
Hodges later told AFP on the margins of the security forum.
"The President (Donald Trump)
knows that, Defence Secretary (James) Mattis knows that, so you're going to see
us continue to invest here in Europe, continue to train, to practise rotational
forces as well as permanently assign forces for the eventuality that in 10 or
15 years we're going to be having to fight in the Pacific," Hodges added.
Nato allies have beefed up their
presence on the bloc's eastern flank over the past four years, operating
rotating garrisons in eastern Europe and the Baltic states in a response to
Russia's 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula.
The US army also set up a new
European headquarters in Poland in the spring of last year to command some
6,000 of its troops deployed in Nato and Pentagon operations across the
alliance's eastern frontier.
The move is one of the largest
deployments of US forces in Europe since the Cold War.
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